I did try, but campsite does not like cpanel much and you have to do
many trweaks and even though it is difficult to make it work.
To say trueth, I did not went sucessfully through.
We're not aware of anyone who has done this. If you have the option I
would recommend that you go with an Ubuntu, Fedora, Debian or BSD based
distribution, since we have experiences with all of these. CentOS is not
one that I'm familiar with although some other people on the list may be
able to help you.
Also, it seems that none of us have any experience with cPanel at this
stage. As Doug said, there /may/ be some interest in supporting this to
some degree, as it is used by a large number of hosting providers. So,
we'd certainly be interested to learn how you go, but at this stage
there's probably not too much that we can help you with directly. Let us
know what seems to be required to get it to work, if you can discern.
In fact I went through CentOS 2 or 3 times and all were ok, but
combination with virtual hosting and cpecially cpanel os bad. The reason
is, cpanel expects to have all webs in his places, all apache
configuration in it places and most od cpanel conventions are not
campsite conventions.
Because campsite is posible to install to respect rules of the system, I
tried to configure it for cpanel, but cpanel configs are so
overcomplicated, that each time I tried, I broke cpanel and other sites.
That is the reason, why I do not recommend using cpanel and campsite.
However using campsite and centos is ok.
Ondra
On Fri, 2005-12-09 at 02:41 +1100, John Pye wrote:
> Hi Rene,
>
> We're not aware of anyone who has done this. If you have the option I
> would recommend that you go with an Ubuntu, Fedora, Debian or BSD based
> distribution, since we have experiences with all of these. CentOS is not
> one that I'm familiar with although some other people on the list may be
> able to help you.
>
> Also, it seems that none of us have any experience with cPanel at this
> stage. As Doug said, there /may/ be some interest in supporting this to
> some degree, as it is used by a large number of hosting providers. So,
> we'd certainly be interested to learn how you go, but at this stage
> there's probably not too much that we can help you with directly. Let us
> know what seems to be required to get it to work, if you can discern.
>
> Cheers
> JP
>
> Ren